"Ratatouille" topper / THU 12-18-25 / "Colorful" Atlantic Coast Conference team / "Severance" actress Tullock / Mushroom in ramen / Knockoff version of a bejeweled Imperial egg, e.g. / Reveal private data of, in modern lingo / Follow-up to an oath / ___ Nation (activist organization since 1990) / Name that sounds like a computer guidebook / Jake's love in "The Sun Also Rises"
Thursday, December 18, 2025
Constructor: Joseph Gangi
Relative difficulty: Easy-Medium
Theme answers:
- DARING RESQQS (17A: Feats performed on knights' quests)
- SYRAQQ ORANGE (29A: "Colorful" Atlantic Coast Conference team)
- "EXQQ MY FRENCH" (44A: Follow-up to an oath)
- UNJUSTLY AQQ (57A: Point at the wrong person)
Queer Nation is an LGBTQ activist organization founded in March 1990 in New York City, by HIV/AIDS activists from ACT UP. The four founders were outraged at the escalation of anti-gay violence on the streets and prejudice in the arts and media. The group is known for its confrontational tactics and its slogans. (wikipedia)
• • •
I was enjoying the puzzle just fine, but then a spate of jarring things happened toward the end that left me with more of a meh feeling. The first and most jarring thing was "EXQQS MY FRENCH." I've only ever heard this phrase as "Pardon my French." It just rolls off the tongue that way. "Excuse" feels oddly formal(er) and just doesn't have the colloquial currency that "Pardon" does. Wikipedia lists the "Excuse" version as a normal alternative version, but it sure wasn't normal to my ear. "Excuse my French" appears to be the older version, but the only version I've ever known (which apparently dates from the '30s, and "may be a result of soldiers returning from the First World War" (wikipedia)) is "Pardon my French." Google returns ~2.2 million hits for ["Pardon my French"] and ~1.5 million for ["Excuse my French"], which isn't that noteworthy of a gap, actually. I suppose it's a real phrase. It just did not feel that way to my ears.
Also bad on my ears: EMANUEL, as clued (42D: Name that sounds like a computer guidebook). First of all, if you can't find a real person for your name clue, consider that maybe you shouldn't use it at all. But if you are going to do this "sounds like" thing, make sure the sounds ... match. I pronounce EMANUEL and this hypothetical E-MANUAL really, really differently. At least I assume it's "E-MANUAL" I'm supposed to be imagining, and not simply "a manual." Why else specify "computer?" Anyway, E-MANUAL requires you to stress that "E," hard. And it's a long "E" too. The sound and rhythm of the word is simply not like EMANUEL at all.
And then there's CUE—why is CUE in this puzzle that is all about replacing "Q"s? You gotta expunge all Q/"cue" business from the rest of your grid if your theme is based entirely on Q/"cue" business. So strange to have an un-"Q"'d CUE just sitting there. Like a fly in your oatmeal. Lastly, on the significant complaint list, is FAUXBERGÉ, which had me literally groaning and saying "noooo..." as I wrote it in (33D: Knockoff version of a bejeweled Imperial egg, e.g.). This is such a one-off, made-up, stupid "word," and the clue ... what is with the "e.g."?? Does Fabergé make things other than eggs, and are there knockoffs of those, and do people call those FAUXBERGÉ? I'm all for doing funny things with words—neologisms, portmanteaux, whatever—but this felt like an answer trying to be superfancy but stepping on its gown mid-twirl and falling on its face. If you're going to introduce a new word to the crossword, make it one that has some currency. Something I can use, or at least feel good knowing. "Nowadays, the term is a part of the expertise vocabulary in the field of Fabergé" (wikipedia). Which means how many people use it then? Like, six?
Otherwise, I thought this puzzle was just fine. Mildly clever. Not hard enough, but puzzles never are any more. Hardest part (as usual) was getting started. I fumbled more than usual in the NW, as I went through not 1 not 2 but 3 bad answers, starting with "YAY, US!" for 1A: "We're the best!," e.g. (BOAST). Just didn't process that "e.g." bit and went for a parallel phrase. A little later, I thought that [Some queens] were BEES (not a surprising mistake at all), and maybe a little before that, I wanted AIR tight instead of SIT tight (20A: ___ tight). I also forgot what a "piste" is. It's a word I've only ever seen in crossword clues, along with its skiing-related cousin, "schuss." Hey, did you know that Schuss, "a one-legged humanoid skiier with a large red and white head," was "the unofficial Olympic mascot of the 1968 Winter Olympics in Grenoble, France" (wikipedia)? Here he is gliding down a piste, presumably:
I've never actually read The Sun Also Rises so BRETT (38A: Jake's love in "The Sun Also Rises") was a mystery today, as was JEN Tullock (59D: "Severance" actress Tullock). I thought DOX had two "X"s, but apparently, as with Pardon v. Excuse, there are two ways to do it (36A: Reveal private data of, in modern lingo). The double-X one just looks cooler. See also "Anti-vaxxers." I think the double-X makes it seem more sinister. Wasn't sure if Kermit was a HI-YO or a HI-HO. The former reads Lone Ranger, the latter Seven Dwarves. I never really thought about the expression that Kermit's using. HI-HO sounds right.Bullets:
- 14A: Mushroom in ramen (ENOKI) — fungi's gift to crosswords. The premium crossword mushroom. You'd think MOREL would be more common, given its more common letters, and over the long history of the puzzle, it's true—there are more MORELs. But in the Modern Era (i.e. since Shortz), ENOKI actually has MOREL beat by a handful of appearances. ENOKI didn't appear in the crossword at all until 2006 (!), whereas MOREL's been trudging along as a crossword answer since 1945. Maleska really loved MOREL—six appearances in 1987. Don't say I never taught you anything!
- 56A: Off-line, online (IRL) — a nice sing-songy clue that is also perfectly accurate. "IRL" = "in real life—a very handy initialism for a world where so much human interaction takes place digitally.
- 51D: "Ratatouille" topper (TOQUE) — got this off the "T." I don't know if I learned this word from crosswords, but it feels like I did. Pretty popular as "Q"-containing words go (29 appearances in the Modern Era, and 46 before that).
Time for more 🌲🐈Holiday Pet Pics🐕🌲 now! Note: PLEASE DO NOT SEND ME ANY MORE PET PICS, I'M ALL FULL UP FOR THIS YEAR, thank you.
Here's Clancy, caught in the act. "I'm innocent! The tinsel attacked me!" Likely story, Clancy.
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| [Thanks, Ginny!] |
Here's Gandalf, working security. No, you may not shake your present. Come back next week. That's right, keep moving.
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| [Thanks, Lily and Lizzie!] |
Here's a rare sighting of the stealthy OrangeKat (RIP). One of the most ferocious of Holiday-time predators, OrangeKat was believed to be responsible for the deaths of scores of Christmas tree ornaments.
| [Thanks, Barbara!] |
Here's Doug the
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| [Thanks, Sam!] |
This is Tom and Jerry. Do you think Jerry's mad that he got the mouse name? He looks kinda mad.
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| [Thanks, Vay!] |
And lastly today, look at this giant sweet baby! This is Berk, 145 pounds of holiday love. Berk is a Kangal Dog rescue. Kangals are originally Turkish but have been exported to parts of Africa to defend local livestock herds from cheetah, thus helping preserve endangered cheetah populations (who would otherwise be killed by farmers). Berk could definitely fight a cheetah. He just doesn't feel like it right now.
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| [Thanks, Karen!] |
That's all. See you next time.
[Follow Rex Parker on BlueSky and Facebook and Letterboxd]
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